No one could beat Preece, who ran full-time in 2016, but chose to funnel his 2017 XFINITY Series resources into this two-race stint with JGR.

That high-stakes gamble clearly paid off - as Preece beamed and raised his arms, his season over, but his future visibly brighter.

"I don't even know what to say," said Preece, who owns 17 career NASCAR Whelan All-American Modified Tour wins, including two this season. "I've got to thank everybody."

So he did.

Benjamin settled for second, which also is his best career finish. Veteran Brian Scott took third in his first start of the season.

"I was very nervous," said Benjamin, who also runs part-time for JGR. "I wanted to make it happen right there."

Preece did just that, from start to finish, with a slight hiccup in between.

He earned his first career Coors Light Pole Award earlier Saturday, powering to a lap of 24.072 seconds at a top speed of 130.857 mph. That dominance carried over into the first stage, which Preece led in its entirety.

He dropped to sixth off pit road, however, which allowed Justin Allgaier to surge to the front. Allgaier would narrowly hold off Preece to win the second stage and gain a coveted playoff point, but a later gamble would reap misfortune instead of reward.

Drivers faced a dilemma when Spencer Gallagher hit the wall, drawing the caution flag with 80 laps to go. Every top contender eventually dove onto pit road. Everyone except Allgaier, that is, whose team hoped another caution would help the decision pay off.

That didn't happen, as Allgaier swiftly dropped from first to seventh, then to 15th - and finally, to a green flag pit stop that came with 25 laps to go. That longed-for caution finally flew shortly after Allgaier returned to the track when Sam Hornish Jr.'s No. 22 Ford hit the wall.

Allgaier's second bad break in as many weeks preceded that nerve-fraying - and caution-filled - finish.

Points leader Elliott Sadler raced near the front most of the day, but ended up 12th. He maintains a 54-point lead over William Byron, who finished ninth.

Preece clearly wasn't racing for points. Only a win.

And he edged Benjamin by a mere .054 seconds - a fitting margin to conclude a sprint-sized season that ended in happy incredulity.

"I'm so at a loss of words right now," Preece said. "I don't know what to say. This is what emotion is, I can tell you that."

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